Lotteries
Are Gambling and May Utilize Video Poker Model
Published Sunday, 9 July 2000, in The State (a
South Carolina newspaper):
"State lottery could easily take form of video
poker"
the lead editorial for
the day:
"As the clock ticked down on video gambling, many poker barons
worried about how to unload the white elephants that their neon-soaked casinos were about to
become. But the owner of the State Line Game Room near Chesnee had plans for his little blight on
the landscape. "When the lottery's voted in, I'll have the first place (in the state) where you can
buy tickets," Sal Mayer told a reporter last month.
You can bet Mr. Mayer isn't thinking about opening
a convenience store that sells scratch-off lottery tickets on the side.
You can bet he's dreaming of the day when he can
reopen his casino and fill it back up with wall-to-wall video gambling machines, where the
addicted sit for hours gazing at screens whose mesmerizing flashing lights provide the only
illumination in artificially darkened rooms. Dreaming of a day when he will go into business
with a new partner -- the state of South Carolina.
It is not an unrealistic dream. In Delaware,
Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota and West Virginia, the state "lotteries" derive the bulk
of their income from "video lottery games," machines usually programmed to play video
poker.
If voters agree in November to authorize a
government-run lottery here in South Carolina, there will be nothing to stop our state from
following suit.
The state constitution won't stop the government
from plugging in video gambling machines and calling them a lottery. Last year, legislators
refused to put such a prohibition in the constitutional amendment that will be on the ballot
in November.
And there's no reason to think the state law that
will spell out how a lottery operates will include such a restriction. Of course, we can't
say that for sure, because the lottery supporters decided they would stand a better chance of
winning if they didn't pass the law spelling out the rules for a lottery until after the
vote. But the bills that lottery supporters proposed put no limits on the types of gambling
operations the state could run as a lottery. If they weren't proposing any restrictions
before the November vote, when they still need to convince voters to support their lottery,
you can be sure they won't even consider them after the vote.
In fact, there is every reason to expect that
video gambling will return to South Carolina under the guise of a lottery.
In every single state where the government runs a
lottery, sales have sagged after the initial excitement wore off. In response, lottery
officials have had to dream up more exciting games and roll out more enticing advertising
campaigns to lure in more gamblers -- because politicians demanded that the gambling money to
which they had become addicted keep pouring in.
With Georgia already running a popular lottery and
North Carolina considering one, South Carolina could expect to see the drop-off even more
quickly than most states. (Texas holds the record for the longest sustained growth before
sales declined -- six years.) That would put lottery promoters here under even more pressure
than most to quickly find a way to keep the money coming. What better way than to tap into
the state's ready-made video poker market?
And who better to become our state's business
partners than the poker barons, who demonstrated an ability to make a higher profit than any
other legally sanctioned gambling operators in the nation?
Lottery proponents might say they would never let
this happen. But they've already had two opportunities to prove that -- when they wrote the
constitutional amendment that the Legislature passed and when they wrote the enabling
legislation that they decided they didn't want the Legislature to pass just yet. Both times
they failed.
There's only one way to make sure that Mr. Mayer
and Fred Collins and Henry Ingram and Alan Schafer and the rest of the poker barons don't
start operating video gambling casinos for the state of South Carolina: On Nov. 7, vote "no."
"
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(posted 9
July 2000)
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